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  1. It is not just the prisons Martyn its the courts too as many NZers no longer have equal access to a proper lawyer and therefore fair and proper legal representation. And our NZ police they can be very racist having experienced this first hand myself and with my whanau. And when Maori are victims we are also treated badly and our lives aren’t worth as much as Pakeha lives. In my view our NZ Police and the courts treat us unfairly they are locked into their own discriminative and racist long held entrenched views.

    1. Absolutely Michelle. The NatACTs took away a lot of people’s access to legal aid, resulting in people unable to properly defend themselves, and ending up convicted unjustly. They also defunded a lot of the community policing that was allowing cops to get to know the communities they worked in, and nip problems in the bud by helping people, rather than waiting until they broke the law and throwing the book at them.

      When you look at all the NatACT reforms that led to an increased prison population, in the context of their denial of prisoners’ right to vote, you start to understand that there was an anti-democratic voter suppression agenda behind these reform. Bomber is right that the entire “justice” system needs to be urgently and thoroughly reformed.

  2. Agree for the most part with this post. But I don’t think funding is so much the biggest problem but what they do with the funding and more focus on raising the entire living conditions of every New Zealander.

    The alliance with the Maori party and National failed Maori – the bribes the Maori party got seem to have made Maori statistics worse. Less housing, less mental health, less education, more imprisonment, less representation. So giving money does nothing, it’s results that are important.

    Neoliberalism has unfortunately made getting and keeping money and funding more important that whatever the money is being used for.

    It does not seem to matter whether a charity or a business or a school. Increasingly money seems to be diverted to middle men or figureheads touting for money than the most vulnerable people who need it.

    For example creative NZ or air funding being given to large multinationals (Mediaworks) who probably hire specialists and are experienced to get large amounts of public money while local grass roots creatives who really need the money can’t get any funding because the process and way it works is designed for corporate processes and networkers to get it.

    Public money being pumped into expanding schools and prisons rather than the kids learning or the prisoners themselves who are effectively getting less money spent on them. It’s very important to monitor HOW the money is being spent.

    Councils spending public money on private lawyers and marketeers and feasibility studies for stadiums rather than public services and reducing rates.

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